1982 Baltimore Colts season – Wikipedia

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30th season in franchise history; second winless season since AFL/NFL merger

The 1982 Baltimore Colts season was the 30th season for the team in the National Football League (NFL), and the Colts’ penultimate season in Baltimore. It was their first under former Arizona State coach Frank Kush, who was hired to replace Mike McCormack after he recorded a 2-14 record in 1981.

The Colts finished the NFL’s strike-shortened 1982 season without a victory, finishing with eight losses and one tie in their nine games. The Colts became the third team since the league’s expansion era began in 1960, after the 1960 Dallas Cowboys and the 1976 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and the second team since the AFL-NFL merger to finish a regular season winless Since then, the 2008 Detroit Lions and the 2017 Cleveland Browns have posted winless seasons; the Colts are the only one of these five teams that did not do so in a full, uninterrupted season (the Cowboys played twelve games, the Buccaneers fourteen, and the Lions and Browns sixteen, as per the league standards of the time). The Colts are also the only winless team to not have a winning percentage of .000 due to the tie giving them a percentage of .056 which is the worst non-zero win percentage for a team in post-1900s North American sports history. This record is only breakable by an NFL team going 0–16–1 (.029) in a season, an MLB team going 8–154 or worse, an NBA team going 4–78 or worse, or by an NHL team finishing with 9 points or fewer.

As mentioned above, the NFL’s 1982 season was disrupted by a strike by the league’s players. In the Colts’ first game after the end of the strike on November 21, they were shut out by the New York Jets 37–0. The following week, they were shut out by the Buffalo Bills 20–0, in a game in which the Colts offense never crossed the 50 yard line. But the week after that, they lost by only three points to the playoff-bound and defending AFC champion Cincinnati Bengals. It would be the final season the Colts tied a game for 40 years.

Offseason[edit]

NFL draft[edit]

Undrafted free agents[edit]

Personnel[edit]

Staff[edit]

Roster[edit]

Regular season[edit]

Schedule[edit]

Week Date Opponent Result Record Venue Attendance
1 September 12 New England Patriots L 13–24 0–1 Memorial Stadium 39,055
2 September 19 at Miami Dolphins L 20–24 0–2 Miami Orange Bowl 51,999
September 26 New York Jets Canceled 0–2 Memorial Stadium NFLPA Strike
October 3 at Detroit Lions Canceled 0–2 Pontiac Silverdome
October 10 Buffalo Bills Canceled 0–2 Memorial Stadium
October 17 at Cleveland Browns Canceled 0–2 Cleveland Municipal Stadium
October 24 Miami Dolphins Postponed (played Jan 2) 0–2 Memorial Stadium
October 31 Tampa Bay Buccaneers Canceled 0–2 Memorial Stadium
November 7 at New England Patriots Canceled 0–2 Schaefer Stadium
November 14 Los Angeles Raiders Canceled 0–2 Memorial Stadium
3 November 21 at New York Jets L 0–37 0–3 Shea Stadium 46,970
4 November 28 at Buffalo Bills L 0–20 0–4 Rich Stadium 33,985
5 December 5 Cincinnati Bengals L 17–20 0–5 Memorial Stadium 23,598
6 December 12 at Minnesota Vikings L 10–13 0–6 Metrodome 53,981
7 December 19 Green Bay Packers T 20–20 (OT) 0–6–1 Memorial Stadium 25,920
8 December 26 at San Diego Chargers L 26–44 0–7–1 Jack Murphy Stadium 49,711
9 January 2, 1983 Miami Dolphins L 7–34 0–8–1 Memorial Stadium 19,073
Note: Intra-division opponents are in bold text.

Standings[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]


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